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The diverse, distinctive and charismatic seahorse genus Hippocampus
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/seahorse-genus-hippocampus/Research Associate, Graham Short documents some surprising morphological differences using computed tomography (CT) imaging to study and compare the skeletal features of non-pygmy and pygmy seahorses.
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The delayed rise of flowering plants
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/delayed-rise-of-flowering-plants/In this seminar, Dr Hervé Sauquet discusses results from a new molecular dating study of angiosperms as a whole, calibrated with the most comprehensive set of fossil age constraints to date.
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Gerard Krefft, Wilhelm Blandowski and the library that travelled
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/gerard-krefft-wilhelm-blandowski-library/AM's Head of World Cultures, Archives and Library, Vanessa Finney discusses Gerard Krefft and Wilhelm Blandowski's expedition to the Murray River in 1857 and the role of books and the story of its travels.
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Invertebrate conservation in the North East Forests of New South Wales
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/invertebrate-conservation-north-east-forests-nsw/UNSW and the Australian Museum are part of a project to develop a spatial, taxonomic and ecological information system to re-assess invertebrates in the areas effected by the 2019/2020 mega-fires.
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Fairy wrasses and fairy tales
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/fairy-wrasses/Join Yi-Kai Tea, recipient of the 2019-20 AMF/AMRI Postgraduate Award recipient, as he discusses his research to uncover the evolutionary history and patterns of temporal and spatial diversification of the fairy wrasses.
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Speciation and extinction: the land snails of Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-seminars-and-lectures/land-snails-lord-howe-norfolk-island/Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands have remarkably rich, narrowly endemic land snail faunas, with a combined ~130 unique species.
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Human-driven habitat modification is altering frog breeding seasons
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-student-forum/human-habitat-modification-frog-breeding/Human-driven habitat modification significantly challenges biodiversity. However, little is known about whether and how different species are responding, particularly among frogs.
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Wirrah did you go: A taxonomic evaluation of Acanthistius ocellatus, the Eastern Wirrah, and Acanthistius paxtoni, the Orangelined Wirrah
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-student-forum/taxonomic-evaluation-wirrah/This study evaluates the taxonomic statuses of Acanthistius ocellatus, the Eastern Wirrah, and Acanthistius paxtoni, the Orangelined Wirrah.
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City slicker or city sicker? How Australian frogs are responding to urbanisation
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-student-forum/australian-frogs-responding-urganisation/Brittany Mitchell explores how FrogID data can inform what habitat characteristics promote threatened species persistence across Australia’s urban centres.
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Frog community co-occurrence in high resolution: distinguishing competition from coexistence with citizen science
https://australian.museum/get-involved/amri/amri-student-forum/frog-community-co-occurrence/Maureen Thompson presents patterns in spatio-temporal frog call co-occurrence across temperate New South Wales in comparison to their know occupied habitat (spatial co-occurrence) using a spatially blocked study design.
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Ramses & the Gold of the Pharaohs
Special exhibition
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Wansolmoana
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Burra
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